last day (15 days later) » 

19:17
hello. are you here?
yup
@AnPel So please explain
ok. first of all thank you for taking the time to respond
1) user enters form data
2) user clicks submit
3) on new page load, data is processed and server decides if login was successful or not
4) a page is rendered and shown to the user
if the user hits refresh, the post vars are resent, and the server repeats steps 3 and 4.
so the page they get is the same.
I don't really expect reasonable people to log in and start refreshing their page with no reason
Alright my point still stands. What I mean is the following:
1) user enters form data on html page
2) user click submit
3) this is what I don't get. "on new page load..." isn't the data already processed when the user clicked on the submit button?
So:
1) user enters for data
2) user click submit
3) submitted form is handled by PHP and the form data is validated
19:24
@RepWhoringPeeHaa no, no. I mean user clicks, and goes to a new page. that pageload is what I refer to as new page load.
@AnPel What happens when the user clicks on the submit button?
they go wherever the forms action attribute points to.
most likely it will be action=""
In that form action you should let PHP validate the form data and redirect to the page you want the user to go
Let me quickly write some pseudo code:
by all means take your time
Login page
<form action="/login.php" method="post">
    <input type="text" name="username">
    <input type="password" name="password">
    <input type="submit" value="Login">
</form>
Then:
login.php
<?php
if (isset($_POST['username']) && isset($_POST['password'])) {
    // do stuff to validate the form data. e.g. match with databse data
    if (valid data) {
        header('Location: yoursite.com/login-success');
        exit();
    }
}

header('Location: yoursite.com/login-failed');
exit();
So basically there is an extra step in between the form submit and the page you want the user to reach. This way when the user refreshes the page there will be no POST data
@AnPel You see?
19:34
This is what I usually do
but
the // do stuff to validate the form data. e.g. match with databse data
also sets errors in an error object
"Wrong data" , "Account is locked" etc..
if I redirect, this object will be lost
thats why I'm trying to find an alternative
That's why I used two different URL: /login-success and /login-failed. You could easily add more like: /login-account-locked. All these URL may be exectly these same except the error message.
Other than that there is no other way I'm afraid
That was what I was meaning by javascript way. Since no-one will be refreshing the new log in page, why not just disable the prompt on the browser if it is a option?
There is no way t prevent that prompt. Since that is what the user agent does. And you don't have any control over it.
i see.. i won't bother you any more. thank you for your time and patince.
@AnPel I wouldn't call it bothering me. I like it better when people want to learn something instead of simply expecting an answer on their question and that's it.
@AnPel Now it's time for beer. Have a good one. cya

last day (15 days later) »